These webpages provide information on the culture and language of the Lepcha people

Lepcha is a Tibeto-Burman language spoken in Sikkim, Darjeeling district in West Bengal in India, in Ilām district in Nepal, and in several villages of Samtsi district in Bhutan. The tribal homeland of the Lepcha people is referred to as ne máyel lyáng ‘hidden paradise' or ne máyel málúk lyáng ‘land of eternal purity'. Most of the areas in which Lepcha is spoken today were once Sikkimese territory. The Lepcha are believed to be the aboriginal inhabitants of Sikkim. Today the Lepcha people constitute a minority of the population of modern Sikkim.

The English name ‘Lepcha' derives from Nepali lāpce or lāpcā , which originally had the derogatory connotation of ‘inarticulate speech'. Nowadays, the term ‘Lepcha' is widely used without this connotation. The Lepcha call themselves mútuncí róngkup rumkup ‘children of the Róng and of God', or simply róngkup ‘children of the Róng'. Alternatively, the Lepcha people may call themselves róng ʔágít ‘the Róng tribe'. The Lepcha word for ‘language' is ʔáríng, and the Lepcha call their own language róngríng .

Information on this site

Despite the attention the Lepcha people have received by researchers since the middle of the nineteenth century, many aspects of the Lepcha language and culture remain undescribed. More >>